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Using Management Information Systems

Using Management Information Systems. David Kroenke Information Security Management Chapter 11. Learning Objectives. Know the sources of security threats. Understand management’s role for developing a security program.

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Using Management Information Systems

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  1. Using Management Information Systems David Kroenke Information Security Management Chapter 11

  2. Learning Objectives • Know the sources of security threats. • Understand management’s role for developing a security program. • Understand the importance and elements of an organizational security policy. • Understand the purpose and operation of technical safeguards. • Understand the purpose and operation of data safeguards. • Understand the purpose and operation of human safeguards. • Learn techniques for disaster preparedness. • Recognize the need for a security incidence-response plan.

  3. Sources of Threats • Three sources of security problems are: human error and mistakes, malicious human activity, and natural events and disasters. • Human errors and mistakesinclude accidental problems caused by both employees and nonemployees. • An example is an employee who misunderstands operating procedures and accidentally deletes customer records. • This category also includes poorly written application programs and poorly designed procedures. • The second source of security problems is malicious human activity. • This category includes employees and former employees who intentionally destroy data or other systems components. • It also includes hackers who break into a system and virus and worm writers who infect computer systems. • Malicious human activity also includes outside criminals who break into a system to steal for financial gain; it also includes terrorism. • Natural events and disasters are the third source of security problems. • This category includes fires, floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis, avalanches, and other acts of nature. • Problems in this category include not only the initial loss of capability and service, but also losses stemming from actions to recover from the initial problem.

  4. Security Problems and Sources

  5. Unauthorized Data Disclosure • Unauthorized data disclosure can occur by human error when someone inadvertently releases data in violation of a policy. • Employees who place restricted data on Web sites that can be reached by search engines may mistakenly publish proprietary or restricted data over the Web. • Pretexting, also called email spoofing, occurs when someone deceives by pretending to be someone else. • A common scam involves a telephone caller who pretends to be from a credit card company and claims to be checking the validity of credit card numbers. • Phishing is a similar technique for obtaining unauthorized data that uses pretexting via email. • The phisher pretends to be a legitimate company and sends an email requesting confidential data.. • Spoofing is another term for someone pretending to be someone else. • IPspoofing occurs when an intruder uses another site’s IP address as if it were that other site. • Sniffing is a technique for intercepting computer communications. • Drive-by sniffers simply take computers with wireless connections through an area and search for unprotected wireless networks. • Even protected wireless networks are vulnerable. • Other forms of computer crime include breaking into networks to steal data such as customer lists, product inventory data, employee data, and other proprietary and confidential data.

  6. Incorrect Data Modification • Incorrect data modification can occur through human error when employees follow procedures incorrectly or when procedures have been incorrectly designed. • Examples include incorrectly increasing a customer’s discount or incorrectly modifying an employee’s salary. • Hacking occurs when a person gains unauthorized access to a computer system. • Examples include reducing account balances or causing the shipment of goods to unauthorized locations and customers.

  7. Faulty Service • Faulty service includes problems that result because of incorrect system operation. • Faulty service could include incorrect data modification, as previously described. • It also could include systems that work incorrectly, by sending the wrong goods to the customer or the ordered goods to the wrong customer, incorrectly billing customers, or sending the wrong information to employees. • Faulty service can also result from mistakes made during the recovery from natural disasters.

  8. Denial of Service • Human error in following procedures or a lack of procedures can result in denial of service. • For example, humans can inadvertently shut down a Web server or corporate gateway router by starting a computationally intensive application. • Denial-of-service attacks can be launched maliciously. • A malicious hacker can flood a Web server, for example, with of millions of bogus services requests that so occupy the server that it cannot service legitimate requests. • Natural disasters may cause systems to fail, resulting in denial of service.

  9. Loss of Infrastructure • Human accidents can cause loss of infrastructure. • Examples are a bulldozer cutting a conduit of fiber-optic cables and the floor buffer crashing into a rack of Web servers. • Theft and terrorist events also cause loss of infrastructure. • A disgruntled, terminated employee can walk off with corporate data servers, routers, or other crucial equipment. • Natural disasters present the largest risk for infrastructure loss. • A fire, flood, earthquake, or similar event can destroy data centers and all they contain.

  10. Security Safeguards as They Relate to the Five Components

  11. The NIST Handbook of Security Elements • When you manage a department, you have the responsibility for information security in that department, even if no one tells you that you do. • Security can be expensive. • There is no magic bullet for security. • Security is a continuing need, and every company must periodically evaluate its security program. • Social factors put some limits on security programs.

  12. Risk Management • Risk is the likelihood of an adverse occurrence. • Management cannot manage threats directly, but it can manage the likelihood that threats will be successful. • Companies can reduce risks, but always at a cost. • Uncertainty refers to the things we don’t know that we don’t know.

  13. Technical Safeguards

  14. Identification and Authentication • Every information system today should require users to sign in with a user name and password. • A smart card is a plastic card similar to a credit card, which has a microchip. The microchip is loaded with identifying data. • Biometric authentication uses personal physical characteristics such as fingerprints, facial features, and retinal scans to authenticate users. Biometric authentication provides strong authentication, but the required equipment is expensive. • Today’s operating systems have the capability to authenticate you to networks and other servers. You sign on to your local computer and provide authentication data; from that point on, your operating system authenticates you to another network or server, which can authenticate you to yet another network and server, and so forth. A system called Kerberos authenticates users without sending their passwords across the computer network.

  15. Encryption • Senders use a key to encrypt a plaintext message and then send the encrypted message to a recipient, who then uses a key to decrypt the message. • With symmetric encryption, both parties use the same key. • With asymmetric encryption, the parties use two keys, one that is public and one that is private. • Secure Socket Layer (SSL) is a protocol that uses both asymmetric and symmetric encryption. • With SSL, asymmetric encryption transmits a symmetric key. Both parties then use that key for symmetric encryption for the balance of that session. • SSL version 1.0 had problems, most of which were removed in version 3.0, which is the version Microsoft endorsed. • A later version, with more problems fixed, was renamed Transport Layer Security (TLS). • Digital signatures ensure that plaintext messages are received without alterations.

  16. Firewalls • A firewall is a computing device that prevents unauthorized network access. It can be a special-purpose computer or a program on a general-purpose computer or on a router • Organizations normally use multiple firewalls. • A perimeter firewall sits outside the organization network; it is the first device that Internet traffic encounters. • Some organizations employ internal firewalls inside the organizational network in addition to the perimeter firewall. • A packet-filtering firewall examines each packet and determines whether to let the packet pass. • Packet-filtering firewalls can prohibit outsiders from starting a session with any user behind the firewall. • They can also disallow traffic from particular sites, such as known hacker addresses. • They can also prohibit traffic from legitimate, but unwanted addresses, such as competitors’ computers. • Firewalls can filter outbound traffic as well. • A firewall has an access control list (ACL), which encodes the rules stating which packets are to be allowed and which are to be prohibited. • No computer should connect to the Internet without firewall protection. • Many ISPs provide firewalls for their customers.

  17. Malware Protection The term malware has several definitions: • Spyware programs are installed on the user’s computer without the user’s knowledge. • Adware is similar to spyware in that it is installed without the user’s permission and resides in the background and observes user behavior. Adware produces pop-up ads and can also change the user’s default window or modify search results and switch the user’s search engine. Protection • Install antivirus and antispyware programs on your computer. • Set up your anti-malware programs to scan your computer frequently. • Update malware definitions. • Open email attachments only from known sources.

  18. Data Safeguards • Data safeguards are measures used to protect databases and other organizational data. • The organization should protect sensitive data by storing it in encrypted form. • Backup copies of the database contents should be made periodically. • The organization should store at least some of the database backup copies off premises, possibly in a remote location. • IT personnel should periodically practice recovery, to ensure that the backups are valid and that effective recovery procedures exist. • The computers that run the DBMS and all devices that store database data should reside in locked, controlled-access facilities.

  19. Human Safeguards–Position Definitions • Effective human safeguards begin with definitions of job tasks and responsibilities. • Given appropriate job descriptions, user accounts should be defined to give users the least possible privilege needed to perform their jobs. • The security sensitivity should be documented for each position.

  20. Human Safeguards–Hiring and Screening • Security considerations should be part of the hiring process. • When hiring for high-sensitive positions, however, extensive screening interviews, references, and high background investigations are appropriate. • This also applies to employees who are promoted into sensitive positions.

  21. Human Safeguards–Dissemination and Enforcement • Employees need to be made aware of the security policies, procedures, and responsibilities they will have. • Employee security training begins during new-employee training with the explanation of general security policies and procedures. • Enforcement consists of three interdependent factors: responsibility, accountability, and compliance.

  22. Human Safeguards–Termination • Companies must establish security policies and procedures for the termination of employees. • Standard human resources policies should ensure that system administrators receive notification in advance of the employee’s last day, so that they can remove accounts and passwords. • The need to recover keys for encrypted data and any other special security requirements should be part of the employee’s out-processing.

  23. Human Safeguards for Nonemployee Personnel • Business requirements may necessitate opening information systems to nonemployee personnel-temporary personnel, vendors, partner personnel (employees of business partners), and the public. • In the case of temporary, vendor, and partner personnel, the contracts that govern the activity should call for security measures appropriate to the sensitivity of the data and IS resource involved. • Companies should require vendors and partners to perform appropriate screening and security training.

  24. Password Management • Passwords are the primary means of authentication. • Passwords are important not just for access to the user’s computer, but also for authentication to other networks and servers to which the user may have access. • Because of the importance of passwords, NIST recommends that employees be required to sign statements known as account acknowledgement forms.

  25. System Monitoring • Important monitoring functions are activity log analyses, security testing, and investigating and learning from security incidents. • Many information system programs produce activity logs. • Firewalls produce logs of their activities, including lists of all dropped packets, infiltration attempts, and unauthorized access attempts from within the firewall. • DBMS products produce logs of successful and failed log-ins. • Web servers produce voluminous logs of Web activities.

  26. Disaster Preparedness • The best safeguard against disaster is appropriate location. If possible, place computing centers, Web farms, and other computer facilities in locations not prone to floods, earthquakes, hurricanes, tornados, or avalanches. • Even at a good location, disasters do occur. • Some businesses prepare backup processing centers in locations geographically removed from the primary processing site. • Organizations create backups for the critical resources at the remote processing centers. • Hot sites are remote processing centers run by commercial disaster-recovery services. • For a monthly fee, they provide all the equipment needed to continue operations following a disaster. • Cold sites provide office space, but customers themselves provide and install the equipment needed to continue operations. • Preparing a backup facility is very expensive; however, the costs of establishing and maintaining that facility are a form of insurance.

  27. Security Guide–Metasecurity • Metasecurity is security about security • “How do we secure the security system?” • The accounting profession has dealt with some of these problems for decades and has developed a set of procedures and standards know as accountingcontrols. • In general, these controls involve procedures that provide checks and balances, independent reviews of activity logs, control of critical assets, and so forth. • Properly designed and implemented, such controls will catch the help-desk representative performing unauthorized account transfers.

  28. Ethics Guide–Security Privacy • Some organizations have legal requirements to protect the customer data they collect and store, but the laws may be more limited than you think: • Gramm-Leach-Bliley (GLB) Act • Privacy Act of 1974 • Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)

  29. Reflection Guide–The Final, Final Word • Congratulations! You’ve made it through the entire book. • With this knowledge you are well prepared to be an effective user of information systems. • Many interesting opportunities are available to those who can apply information in innovative ways.

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